This invention relates to steered rolling devices, for example roller skates, multi tracked skates, skis on wheels.
As far as the mentioned rolling devices are to be steered by leaning sideways they steer the same way on either side. The state of the art is for example shown by US6,755,425 or EP1213043B1, which disclose a steering mechanism containing two wheels guided by a laterally oriented closed parallelogram or trapezium fourbar linkage.
A pair of rolling devices is attached to the two legs of the skater. Upon slaloming, in particular when skating along a circle, both legs perform tracks with equal curvature, which are offset by the legs' distance. Hence one track crosses the other so that parallel skating is disturbed eventually causing the skater to fall down and suffer injury. This interference can be avoided by using technical means, which let the outer skate perform a wider curve than the inner skate.
DE10135481A1 discloses one solution to the problem insofar as two fixed wheels oriented one behind the other providing a lateral offset so that upon leaning to one side the first wheel has contact to the ground, upon leaning to the other side, the second wheel has contact to the ground. Hence turning left provides a wheel-base which is different from the wheel-base when turning right providing the desired difference between the left curve radius and the right curve radius. However this solution is disadvantageous, as when turning left or right either the one or the other wheel lifts from the ground which results in a bad tracking behavior. Furthermore the wheels suffer from asymmetric wear. Therefore it is desirable that the asymmetric steering is intrinsically provided by the steering mechanism itself.
The purpose of the invention therefore is to design the steering mechanism in a way that the steering effect generated by the sideways leaning to the left is different from the steering to the right.
Based on the known rolling device to be used on the ground which is symmetrically steered by leaning sideways, consisting of an upper boot, a frame attached to the upper boot and at least one steering mechanism, the steering mechanism consisting of one pair of wheels oriented side by side, wherein the two wheels are rotatably affixed to two wheel holders and wherein the two wheel holders are pivotably interconnected using an upper horizontal cross-guide and a lower horizontal cross-guide so that a parallelogram or trapezium-like closed fourbar linkage results, wherein the two horizontal cross-guides are rotatably affixed each to the frame, wherein the direction of the rotation axes makes a solid angle alpha with the direction of the pivot axes of the closed fourbar linkage, wherein the two cross-guides and the frame have bore-holes which accommodate axles, bearings or spherical bushings allowing rotation around the said rotation axes, the purpose of the invention is achieved by the said bore-holes being positioned so that the vertical projection of the said rotation axes onto the ground each make a solid angle beta beyond zero to the vertical projection of the pivot axes of the closed fourbar linkage onto the ground.
In particular it is shown (
It is desirable that the two wheels 1a, 1b carry equal loads at any lean angle. This is achieved by having the axes 2, 2a intersect the vertical middle plane in points M, M2, where the intersection points M, M2 are located on the vertical line 19 through the wheel axis 7. The vertical middle plane is defined by being perpendicular to the wheels' axes 7 and being located centrally between the two wheels 1a, 1b.
The angle beta turns out to be proportional to the angle alpha squared and proportional to the desired difference between the two curvatures, i.e. the legs' distance, and to be inversely proportional to the wheel-base. This relation can be derived easily by considering the geometry of the invented system. This invention allows many combinations of the angles alpha and beta, as required by the type of intended application.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4133546 | Rosenblum | Jan 1979 | A |
4817974 | Bergeron | Apr 1989 | A |
6398229 | Saylor | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6755425 | Gorisch | Jun 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040164506 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |